Hudson Swafford is finally setting the record straight.
The former LIV Golf player opens up in this exclusive interview about the real differences between LIV and the PGA Tour — and he doesn’t hold back.
From the money myths to competition quality and locker room culture, Swafford debunks what he calls “lazy narratives” pushed by critics and media alike.
📌 In this video:
The biggest misconceptions about LIV Golf
What life was REALLY like behind the scenes
How LIV compares to the PGA Tour on and off the course
Swafford’s message to PGA Tour loyalists
What players actually miss about LIV
This is a MUST-WATCH for anyone trying to understand pro golf’s civil war.
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whatsoever. So, the first one that comes up the most is like, all right, guys go to live, they get paid a ton of money, and then they stop caring and don’t work on their game very hard. Truth or not? Not even close. I mean, it was super competitive. Yeah. I mean, guys are guys are grinding. I mean, I saw Phil Mickelson, I saw Brooks, I saw Dustin working harder on their game at events than I ever did on the PJ tour. Interesting. Yeah. I kind of think that narrative has been way overblown as if the guys on the PGA tour aren’t making pots of money too, but yet somehow they still find a way to care and grind. Another one, the no cut 54 events, which has gotten interesting with the way the PJ tour has changed their schedule, but no cut events, 54 hole events don’t prepare live guys for major championship success. Thoughts? I mean, plenty of guys have had success in major championships. I mean, you’ve had I mean, even Richard Bland winning a couple major championships on the senior tour. You’ve had uh you mean you have Bryson and Brooks win. You’ve had guys be competitive. Um but like I said, guys go to major events and they do everything different from what they’ve done all year and the way they prepare. So they put these tournaments up on their pedestal as they should and you kind of train all year for it. But I just don’t think you should treat majors any differently than you would treat a normal week. and preparing.